Coulomb Gap
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First introduced by M. Pollak, the Coulomb gap is a soft gap in the single-particle
density of states In solid state physics and condensed matter physics, the density of states (DOS) of a system describes the number of modes per unit frequency range. The density of states is defined as D(E) = N(E)/V , where N(E)\delta E is the number of states i ...
(DOS) of a system of interacting localized electrons. Due to the long-range Coulomb interactions, the single-particle DOS vanishes at the chemical potential, at low enough temperatures, such that thermal excitations do not wash out the gap.


Theory

At zero temperature, a classical treatment of a system gives an upper bound for the DOS near the
Fermi energy The Fermi energy is a concept in quantum mechanics usually referring to the energy difference between the highest and lowest occupied single-particle states in a quantum system of non-interacting fermions at absolute zero temperature. In a Fermi ga ...
, first suggested by Efros and Shklovskii. The argument is as follows: Let us look at the
ground state The ground state of a quantum-mechanical system is its stationary state of lowest energy; the energy of the ground state is known as the zero-point energy of the system. An excited state is any state with energy greater than the ground state. ...
configuration of the system. Defining E_i as the energy of an
electron The electron ( or ) is a subatomic particle with a negative one elementary electric charge. Electrons belong to the first generation of the lepton particle family, and are generally thought to be elementary particles because they have no kn ...
at site i , due to the disorder and the Coulomb interaction with all other electrons (we define this both for occupied and unoccupied sites), it is easy to see that the energy needed to move an electron from an occupied site i to an unoccupied site j is given by the expression: :\Delta E=E_j-E_i-e^2/r_ . The subtraction of the last term accounts for the fact that E_j contains a term due to the interaction with the electron present at site i , but after moving the electron this term should not be considered. It is easy to see from this that there exists an energy E_f such that all sites with energies above it are empty, and below it are full (this is the Fermi energy, but since we are dealing with a system with interactions it is not obvious a-priori that it is still well-defined). Assume we have a finite single-particle DOS at the Fermi energy, g(E_f) . For every possible transfer of an electron from an occupied site i to an unoccupied site j , the energy invested should be positive, since we are assuming we are in the ground state of the system, i.e., \Delta E>=0 . Assuming we have a large system, consider all the sites with energies in the interval _f-\epsilon, E_f+\epsilon The number of these, by assumption, is N= 2 \epsilon g(E_f). As explained, N/2 of these would be occupied, and the others unoccupied. Of all pairs of occupied and unoccupied sites, let us choose the one where the two are closest to each other. If we assume the sites are randomly distributed in space, we find that the distance between these two sites is of order: R \sim (N/V)^ , where d is the dimension of space. Plugging the expression for N into the previous equation, we obtain the inequality: E_j-E_i-C e^2 (\epsilon g(E_f)/V)^ >0 where C is a coefficient of order unity. Since E_j-E_i <2\epsilon , this inequality will necessarily be violated for small enough \epsilon . Hence, assuming a finite DOS at E_f led to a contradiction. Repeating the above calculation under the assumption that the DOS near E_f is proportional to (E-E_f)^\alpha shows that \alpha>=d-1 . This is an upper bound for the Coulomb gap. Efros considered single electron excitations, and obtained an integro-differential equation for the DOS, showing the Coulomb gap in fact follows the above equation (i.e., the upper bound is a tight bound). Other treatments of the problem include a mean-field numerical approach, as well as more recent treatments such as, also verifying the upper bound suggested above is a tight bound. Many Monte Carlo simulations were also performed, some of them in disagreement with the result quoted above. Few works deal with the quantum aspect of the problem. Classical Coulomb gap in clean system without disorder is well captured within Extended Dynamical Mean Field Theory (EDMFT) supported by Metropolis Monte Carlo simulations.


Experimental observations

Direct experimental confirmation of the gap has been done via tunneling experiments, which probed the single-particle DOS in two and three dimensions. The experiments clearly showed a linear gap in two dimensions, and a parabolic gap in three dimensions. Another experimental consequence of the Coulomb gap is found in the conductivity of samples in the localized regime. The existence of a gap in the spectrum of excitations would result in a lowered conductivity than that predicted by Mott variable-range hopping. If one uses the analytical expression of the single-particle DOS in the Mott derivation, a universal e^ dependence is obtained, for any dimension.B. Shklovskii and A. Efros, Electronic properties of doped semiconductors (Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1984). The observation of this is expected to occur below a certain temperature, such that the optimal energy of hopping would be smaller than the width of the Coulomb gap. The transition from Mott to so-called Efros–Shklovskii variable-range hopping has been observed experimentally for various systems. Nevertheless, no rigorous derivation of the Efros–Shklovskii conductivity formula has been put forth, and in some experiments e^ behavior is observed, with a value of \alpha that fits neither the Mott nor the Efros–Shklovskii theories.


See also

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Coulomb's law Coulomb's inverse-square law, or simply Coulomb's law, is an experimental law of physics that quantifies the amount of force between two stationary, electrically charged particles. The electric force between charged bodies at rest is conventiona ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Coulomb Gap Electronic band structures Statistical mechanics Physical quantities